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Put your hands on the remote! browse music »Native Tongues by Natural History
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fave it World Fusion
10 tracks | 53 minutes
Released Sep 2000
on Worldsoul Records
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- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 00:41 Sunspots lyrics BUY MP3 00:41 Sunspots lyrics "GIFT MP3" 00:41 Sunspots
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 05:15 Rave On! lyrics BUY MP3 05:15 Rave On! lyrics "GIFT MP3" 05:15 Rave On!
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 07:43 Lemon Shiva lyrics BUY MP3 07:43 Lemon Shiva lyrics "GIFT MP3" 07:43 Lemon Shiva
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 07:36 Native Tongues lyrics FREE 07:36 Native Tongues lyrics "GIFT MP3" 07:36 Native Tongues
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:12 Listen To The Voices lyrics BUY MP3 04:12 Listen To The Voices lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:12 Listen To The Voices
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 08:20 Nine lyrics BUY MP3 08:20 Nine lyrics "GIFT MP3" 08:20 Nine
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 08:33 Who Do You Think You Are? lyrics BUY MP3 08:33 Who Do You Think You Are? lyrics "GIFT MP3" 08:33 Who Do You Think You Are?
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:11 Ah Mamoun! lyrics BUY MP3 04:11 Ah Mamoun! lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:11 Ah Mamoun!
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Multi-ethnic, ecstatic, hillbilly-tribal, neo-shamanistic bop. Fearless improvisations with voice, electric violin, sitar, percussion, cello and more, recorded live!
Bio / Background
Natural History (aka Jared Shapiro, Barry Hyman and Derrik Jordan) have been breaking the multi-cultural sound barrier since 1974, weaving sounds, instruments and styles from every corner of the planet into a intricate and spontaneous musical tapestry.
They have spent nearly three decades exploring shamanistic trance music, Afro-Celtic grooves, improvisation with singing animals, modal ragas, cross-cultural dance music, hillbilly-tribal fusion, and ecstatic chants.
Their sound is like nothing else: wild, unpredictable, playful, fearless, healing and always resplendent with humor and joy.
All of the music on this CD was recorded live, with no overdubbing and no studio tricks, so as to capture the extraordinary improvisational spirit and spontaneity that is Natural History.
↓ more ↓Natural History Native Tongues (Worldsoul 2000)
What right do three white guys from the chilly Northeast have to play "multi-ethnic" music? The same right that Elvis had to play rhythm and blues (the code word at the time for black pop music) or Aretha had to play "The Weight" or Benny Goodman had to play jazz. Without "cross-over," there would be no rock and roll, and if African Americans had not picked up European classical instruments, there would be no jazz.
So forget that a white guy named Derrik Jordan plays the mbira; that a white guy named Jared Shapiro plays the dumbek; and that a white guy named Barry Hyman plays the sitar. They are not Ravi Shankar, nor are they Baba Olatunji, nor do they claim to be. They are improvisers who cross-pollinate sounds from diverse cultures into a collage, much like electronica remixers plunder and manipulate existing sounds to create a pastiche of the original that stands on its own.
Natural History incorporates the incantatory sound of its members' own tradition, rock and roll, in a guitar solo on "Ah, Mamoun!" that could hold its own in any of fifteen psychedelic songs. The band also invents incantations that do not lay claim to any tradition, but issue from the musicians' own souls and vocal chords, as on "Who Do You Think You Are?" The moaning resembles not tribal chants but, if anything, the jumbled garbling of Charles Mingus on "Passions of a Man." Amazingly, this track was recorded live (as was all of the music on the disc) on Hyman's radio program "Talkin' Blues About the News" on WRPI in Troy, New York. It sounds like a tribe of three men creating its own tribal chant.
Bill Baue
music director
radio free Brattleboro
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